Your question may spawn from a perspective of not knowing precisely what police do.
Police enforce the law based on their training and best judgements. The testimony and judgement of a police officer is considered to be highly credible. That doesn't mean they are infallible and it isn't their job to interpret the law anyway; the courts do that.
So you're arguing the police officer was trained to give an unlawful directive to "shut your ****ing mouth" which violates the person's 1st amendment rights IF they politely start speaking AFTER they were given permission to do so?
If he was trained to do that, I wonder why he was suspended???
Police are supposed to do what they think is right and the courts apply the law accordingly. If the officer was wrong, the court should be able to show that.
Once again, you believe it is rational and "right" to threaten to handcuff and tell someone to shut their "****ing mouth" (violating their 1st amendment right) AFTER they were given permission to speak? Got it... I guess we really do have to agree to disagree here.
He didn't do anything wrong hence why he's still a cop. Now as for his superiors, I wouldn't be surprised if one or more of them got fired.
Well, he clearly did something wrong. Was he not suspended? I can think that's a slap on the wrist, but isn't a slap on the wrist usually done after someone does something against procedure? Why was he suspended then?
By the way, can you answer my question about the speeding violation please?
Does claiming ignorance mean we didn't really do anything wrong? To put it spiritually, is everyone who claims ignorance to Jesus Christ being the the Savior of the world going to be free from judgment? (Perhaps I shouldn't conflate God's law with man's faulty law."